so you think you are a social smoker… who are you kidding?

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So you think you are a social smoker… Who are you kidding?. Joseph R DiFranza, MD Department of Family Medicine and Community Health University of Massachusetts Medical School. What is a social smoker?. Fewer than 5 cigarettes per day May not smoke everyday No symptoms of addiction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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So you think you are a social smoker… Who are you kidding?

Joseph R DiFranza, MDDepartment of Family Medicine and Community HealthUniversity of Massachusetts Medical School

What is a social smoker?

Fewer than 5 cigarettes per day May not smoke everyday No symptoms of addiction

The girl who didn’t read the text book

Addiction

From addictus, meaning assigned A Roman magistrate would assign the loser

to perform work or pay a forfeit to the victor. Addiction does not mean self-destruction, it

means an obligation, a loss of autonomy.

The Loss of Autonomy

When quitting requires an effort or involves discomfort

The Hooked on Nicotine Checklist

Hooked on Nicotine Checklist 1) Have you ever tried to quit, but couldn’t? 2) Do you smoke now because it is really

hard to quit? 3) Have you ever felt like you were addicted

to tobacco?

Hooked on Nicotine Checklist 4) Do you ever have strong cravings to

smoke? 5) Have you ever felt like you really needed a

cigarette? 6) Is it hard to keep from smoking in places

where you are not supposed to?

Hooked on Nicotine Checklist When you haven't smoked for a while do

you… 7) find it hard to concentrate? 8) feel more irritable? 9) feel a strong need or urge to smoke? 10) feel nervous, restless or anxious?

Prospective study of adolescents 25% had lost autonomy within 30 days 25% had lost autonomy by the time they were

smoking 1 cigarette/month 10% had lost autonomy within 2 days Students were smoking an average of 2

cigarettes/week when addiction started.

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The clinical data indicate that… One cigarette must rapidly change the brain.

The neuroscience shows…

The nicotine from one cigarette occupies 88% of the brain’s nicotinic receptors.

One dose of nicotine triggers the transcription of at least 168 genes in the brain.

One dose stimulates an increase in the number of brain nicotine receptors over night.

One dose initiates drug sensitization.

Nicotine-Induced Behavioral Sensitization

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The neuroscience shows…

Four doses of nicotine are enough to increase the density of dendrites in brain regions involved in addiction.

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Before…

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The First Case Series on Nicotine Addiction In all addicted smokers withdrawal triggers a

desire to smoke that compels them to use tobacco

The First Case Series on Nicotine Addiction How would you describe this need to

someone who has never smoked? Wanting Craving Needing

Wanting

Wanting is a mild transient desire to smoke that is easily ignored.

“It’s like wanting some chocolate.”

Craving

Craving is more intense than wanting and intrudes upon the person’s thoughts.

It is more persistent and is difficult to ignore. “I feel like someone inside of me is really

telling me to smoke.” Craving “just, like, pops in your head, like

someone is sending you a message.”

Craving

Craving is like “being hungry, but instead of your stomach saying it, it’s your brain…it’s just hungry, except for a cigarette.”

“I’ve felt, like, physical urges, like just craving them, but not like a mental thing.”

Needing Needing is an intense and urgent desire to

smoke that is impossible to ignore. The individual must smoke to restore a normal mental or physical state.

“Pretty urgent… you need it and you can’t get your mind off it.”

“You really want one. You know you need it. You know you’ll feel normal after smoking, and you have to smoke to feel normal again.”

When addiction first develops No withdrawal symptoms Wanting Wanting and Craving Wanting, Craving, and Needing

Clinical Staging of Nicotine Addiction Stage 1 No withdrawal symptoms

Smokers can remain abstinent indefinitely without withdrawal symptoms.

Stage 2 Wanting “If I go too long without smoking the first thing I will notice is a

mild desire to smoke that I can ignore.” Stage 3 Craving

“If I go too long without smoking, the desire for a cigarette becomes so strong that it is hard to ignore and it interrupts my thinking.”

Stage 4 Needing “If I go too long without smoking, I just can’t function right, and I

know I will have to smoke just to feel normal again.”

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Mean Adolescent HONC Scores by Stage

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The Latency to Withdrawal

“A little light bulb goes off and it’s like, alright, time [to smoke].”

The latency is the interval between smoking one cigarette and wanting, craving, or needing another.

Latency-to-wanting Latency-to-craving Latency-to-needing

The Latency to Withdrawal

At the onset of addiction the latency-to-wanting may be longer than a month.

Smokers do not realize they are having withdrawal symptoms.

With a half of life of 2 hours in the blood, how can nicotine keep withdrawal at bay for weeks?

The neuroscience shows…

One dose of nicotine increases noradrenaline synthesis for at least a month.

One dose lowers activation thresholds for a month. One dose affects tyrosine hydroxylase activity for a

month. One dose in adolescence has measurable effects on

behavior during adulthood.

The Latency to Withdrawal

At the onset of addiction the latency-to-wanting may be longer than a month.

With repeated tobacco use tolerance develops causing the latencies to shrink.

The shortening of the latency drives the escalation in tobacco use.

The Latency to Withdrawal

After smoking for 6 weeks, a 16-year-old girl noticed a latency-to-craving of 2 days

which shortened to 4 hours by age 161/2, …to 2 hours by age 17, …to 1.5 hours by age 18, …to 1 hour by age 19, …and to 30-45 minutes by age 21.

The Latency to Withdrawal-factors of 21) 4 weeks

2) 2 weeks3) 1 week (1 cig/wk)4) 3.5 days (2 cig/wk)5) 42 hours6) 21 hours7) 11.5 hours8) 5.6 hours9) 2.8 hours10) 1.4 hours11) 42 minutes (1 ppd) 12) 21 minutes (2 ppd)

At age 12, smoking 2 cigs/wk increases the risk for heavy adult smoking 174 fold

Tobacco use

Symptoms of Wanting, Craving, Needing

Shortening latencies

Neurological adaptations

The Vicious Cycle

The Blind Men and the Elephant.

The Blind Men and the Elephant

- John Godfrey SaxeAnd so these men of IndostanDisputed loud and long,Each in his own opinionExceeding stiff and strong.Though each was partly in the right,They all were in the wrong!

The committee of blind researchers describe the multiple domains of addiction. Craving Withdrawal Regularity of use Spending too much time smoking Giving up other activities in order to smoke Smoking immediately upon arising from bed Smoking more than intended Tolerance

All of the so-called domains of nicotine addiction are the same elephant: Wanting, Craving and Needing and the Latency to Withdrawal.

The Latency-factors of 21) 4 weeks2) 2 weeks3) 1 week (1 cig/wk)4) 3.5 days (2 cig/wk)5) 42 hours6) 21 hours (daily smoking)7) 11.5 hours8) 5.6 hours9) 2.8 hours10) 1.4 hours11) 42 minutes (1 ppd) 12) 21 minutes (2 ppd)

Bums cigarettes at parties

Smokes only on weekends

First time buying cigarettes Smokes before work or school Smokes upon awakening Uses lunch break to smoke Smoking in the bathroom

Smokes in middle of the night

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I am careful not to run out. I make sure I have enough cigarettes for the next morning (adults)

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Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

To some degree I have to plan my schedule around when I will be able to smoke (adults)

How the Latencies affect smokers’ behaviors Required cigarettes and elective cigarettes

How can I miss you when you won’t go away?

1) 4 weeks2) 2 weeks3) 1 week4) 3.5 days5) 42 hours6) 21 hours (1 cpd) 7) 11.5 hours8) 5.6 hours9) 2.8 hours10) 1.4 hours11) 42 minutes12) 21 minutes

A person who starts smoking one cigarette per day will not experience withdrawal until their latency shortens to less than a day.

Asymptomatic addiction

Smokers are late to recognize addiction “I’m not addicted, I only smoke once a week

when I feel the urge.” “I can’t be addicted because I don’t need to

smoke everyday.” “I can’t be addicted because I never buy my

own cigarettes.” Smokers don’t recognize their addiction until

stage 3 or 4, or when the latency shortens to less than 24 hours.

Nondaily smokers relapse at the same rate as daily smokers Over 90% fail at their first attempt to quit

smoking.

The neurological changes triggered by nicotine begin with the first dose.

Symptoms of a compulsion to use tobacco develop through 4 stages.

The shortening of the latency to withdrawal drives the progression to daily smoking.

Most social smokers are addicted and don’t know it.

Summary

So you think you are a social smoker… Who are you kidding?

Joseph R DiFranza, MDDepartment of Family Medicine and Community HealthUniversity of Massachusetts Medical School

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